Recommended Educational Consultant in Denver, Colorado

Dartmouth College Baker LibraryWho doesn’t love a compliment?  Yesterday afternoon I received a nice note from the mother of one of my clients who was accepted early to Dartmouth.  He’s smart, talented, and fun to hang around.  I enjoyed working with him on his essays.  Apparently, he felt good about the experience, too.
Here’s what his mom had to say:
Subject: Thank you!
Dear Mark,
I just wanted to say thanks for helping Alex achieve his goal of attending Dartmouth.  He is very excited about this opportunity and can’t wait to get on with the next step in his life.  Your help was invaluable in this achievement.
Alex enjoyed his meetings with you and I know he listened to all your great college advice.  I appreciate how the two of you handled everything so smoothly.  I am feeling lucky that I ran across your name on the internet.  I know other families would benefit from your services. I will give you the highest recommendation when the subject of college apps comes up with the folks I talk to.
Thanks again for helping us out.  I know Alex will always remember you as I hear him speak of you often.
Sincerely,
MJR
 
Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant
 
 

Carnival of College Admissions: Alex Takes Off!

The newest edition of the Carnival of College Admission is now up and running over at Accepted.com. You’ve got to take a look!

Not only are there great resources, but the story is clever. This is a fine community of bloggers who focus on the transition from high school to college. If you haven’t checked this out yet, the time is now!

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant


PS:  If you have a passion for furniture art, you might want to consider some art chairs.


Five Essential Tips for a Perfect College Essay

Writing about ourselves is one of the most difficult tasks we are called upon to do.  Ask any adult who has written their own résumé.  It can be hard to crow about your accomplishments, in part because we know that it’s not nice to brag.

Essays aren’t about bragging.  They are an opportunity to bring your personality to light.  So consider these tips to help you spotlight yourself in the perfect college essay.


1.  Consider your audience.

Think about what it must be like to be a college admissions officer.  Stacks and stacks of applications.  Hundreds and hundreds of essays.  A few short weeks to read them all.  At some selective colleges and universities, an admissions officer may have only a few minutes to read through your entire file, including your essays.  So do what you can to grab their attention from the opening line.

College admissions officers are humans.  They want to be entertained.  They want to be moved.  They want to care about the person on the application.  They want to learn something new.  So make sure that you consider your audience as you write.  You don’t want your reader to drop off to sleep after the first paragraph.


2.  Put yourself at the center.

The prompts colleges offer to serve as the lynchpin of the college essay focus on things other than you.  They ask you to write about another person in your life, or a historical character, or an issue you care about. They ask you to write about your conception of diversity.  Or maybe they want to know about an activity you enjoy.

The problem with the prompts is that most students launch into a lengthy exegesis about that other person, or that issue, or that activity, without saying much of anything interesting about the real focus of a college essay:  the applicant.  If you write about Grandpa Joe, don’t recount his life story:  show how his life has affected yours.  If you write about a social or political issue, don’t waste words telling us about how to solve the issue:  illustrate how that issue makes you feel or has prompted you to act.  If you write about an activity, don’t restate facts that we can read about places on your application:  show how that activity reflects your personality, your life’s priorities, or something special about you.


3.  Tell a story.

Everyone likes a good story, including admissions officers.  No matter what topic you choose, try to incorporate a good yarn at the center of it (with you as the principal character, of course).  Consider the beginning, middle, and end of that story.  Think about what you learned in your English classes about the construction of a good story—whether fiction or non-fiction.  Is there a conflict that needs to be resolved in the narrative?  What is the climax of the story?  How do you construct the arc of the story, from the initial build-up to the denouement?  You are telling your story, so make sure it has all the literary elements of a good one.


4.  Go deep.

College applications are very superficial.  The blanks and the spaces in the application require you to fill in basic data about yourself:  parents’ names, grades in school, extracurricular involvements.  It’s all a bunch of facts.  Information devoid of spirit or humanity.

The essay, then, is your chance to show off your humanity, to display some emotion, some soul.  The objective is to communicate—to a perfect stranger—what it is you care about most deeply, to plumb the depths of your sentiments, your passions.  So get philosophical.  Help your reader to understand what makes you different from that stack of other soulless applications she is reading.  Give her something to think about, something that makes her say, “Wow, this kid is mature—deep, even.”  If you stay on the surface, you miss your opportunity to demonstrate that you are unique.  So go deep.

5.  Show some vulnerability.

In my brainstorming sessions with my clients, I’m always on the lookout for those stories in which the student was uncomfortable.  Was there a difficult situation that you had a hard time navigating?  Did a situation make you uneasy, frustrated, or confused?  If you had to relive that situation, would you have handled it differently?

Many students hesitate to write about such experiences, believing that they need to demonstrate strengths, rather than weaknesses.  They fear that they will be passed over if they do not appear superhuman:  “I faced the unbeatable foe, and slayed him!”

Yet admissions officers are not looking for superheroes to populate their campuses.  They are looking for living and breathing humans who are capable of reflection, who understand their fallibility, and who will contribute their strengths and an ability to reflect upon weakness to the betterment of the campus community.

So don’t be afraid to show some vulnerability, to acknowledge frailty, or to even admit defeat.  We’re all human, and that humanity should be at the heart of your college essay.

Mark Montgomery
College Essay Consultant



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End Student Loan Scams

An editorial in today’s New York Times supports President Obama’s plan to remove the private sector from the business of providing student loans. Instead, the government will lend directly to students, through the intermediary of the colleges and universities.
This seems very sensible to me, and pretty much the only way to eliminate the scams and profiteering that have characterized the student loan industry.
If the government is loaning the money, the government should control how it is lent.
Here’s today’s editorial in the Times.
What do you think should be done?

Do Your Students Get Into Their First Choice College?

Parents call  me nearly every day to ask about my services.  Understandably, they want to know about my success rate.  Here’s the usual question:

How many of your students get into their first choice college? Choose the right college

Many college consultants tout a “success rate” based on whether students get into their first or second choice college.  But this is a tricky statistic to report and impossible to verify.  For example, if a student enters my office with a GPA of 3.1, no honors courses, and an ACT composite of 27, eagerly reporting that Harvard is his first choice, my reporting statistics are immediately in trouble.  After a process of counseling during which the student redefines his own educational success differently, the student’s first choice may change—in which case I might be able to recover my statistical success rate.

But then there are the students who even after hours and hours of counseling refuse to believe (like the student above) that first-choice Harvard is out of reach.  While I’m confident about the low statistical probability that this client will somehow sneak through the gates of Harvard Yard, it is not for me to deny the student his right to apply.  Perhaps this student needs the rejection letter in black and white to even consider other options.  So I would go ahead and let the student cling to the dream, and even help the student through the process—even as I communicate my doubts and ensure that the student is applying to other excellent colleges that I know he will learn to love—but only after Harvard rejects him.  But how would I report this student statistically?  Harvard is his first choice.  He didn’t get in.  Does that make me a poor counselor?

Just as all college counselors encourage their clients to take statistics published by the colleges and universities with a grain of salt, I encourage you to approach placement statistics published by independent counselors with the same skepticism.  College counseling is about developing an individualized educational plan for each young man and woman who comes in my door.  Virtually none go away unhappy with the outcome.

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant


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Educational Consultant Helps Student Prepare for College Admission

Different students need different sorts of help as they navigate the college admission process.  In this short video, one of my clients explains that individually tailored college planning helped him to identify some schools that he was really excited about, and then gave him the tools to bring out the best in himself.
The result?  A very happy camper–with a Dean’s Scholarship!





Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant

An "AMAZING" Educational Consultant

As my seniors are gearing up for their freshman year, I sometimes get letters from parents thanking me for helping their kids through the college admissions maze.  I received this note the other day.  Sure is nice to hear that I made a difference.

I made the very wise decision to hire Mark Montgomery to assist my son, Alex, in his college search.  We did not start the college search until the fall of Alex’s senior year. The whole college search and application process was overwhelming.  I felt like helping Alex choose a college could become a full time job and I already had one of those.  Alex new he wanted to attend a college out of state, preferably on the East Coast.  Stymied by all the choices, I hired Mark to help Alex narrow the options and choose schools that fit his goals and abilities.

Our experience with Mark was AMAZING!  He is very professional, and he listened and analyzed Alex’s desires in developing a list of prospective schools.  He kept Alex on track and I did not have to be the one holding Alex to the admission deadlines.  I simply got to enjoy the process and help Alex make his final decision.

As a wrestler, Mark encouraged Alex to use his sport as a back door to some of his “stretch” schools.  Mark helped Alex develop letters to the coaches and pushed him to get them out in a timely manner.  Alex needed to raise his ACT scores and Mark lead us to a tutor that helped Alex raise his score 4 points!  Mark truly mentored Alex through the college maze and I think they will have a friendship for years to come.  I could write a lot more, however, in summary Mark’s services are worth every penny!  Alex has been accepted to Lehigh University with the bonus of a Dean’s Scholarship, and can hardly wait to start the next chapter of his life.


Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant


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Keeping Perspective on Selective College Admissions

Theresa, a dear friend whom I haven’t seen in ages, called me the other day.  We talked for a long time.  Her son is a sophomore in high school.  As his doting mother, Theresa is in a lather about his prospects for college admission.

As we hadn’t spoken in quite a while, Theresa asked me about my philosophy about college admissions.  She wanted to know what I thought were the quality colleges.

Theresa is an educator at a major state university.  I asked her what good education looks like, in her professional opinion.  She responded, predictably, that good education is all about what happens in the classroom between a well-prepared, knowledgeable, caring, and enthusiastic instructor and the willing, capable, and hard-working student.

Moral of the story:  education is not about an institution.  It is a process that occurs between teachers and students, primarily.  It is about learning, not about prestige.

The sad fact is that many of the most prestigious, Gotta-Get-In colleges do not deliver the best quality education—based on this bare-bones definition.  They deliver a lot of atmospherics and ivy and Nobel Prize winners and fantastic facilities (for graduate students, anyway).  But what happens in the classroom is not necessarily the priority of every Gotta-Got-In institution.

Theresa and I bandied these ideas around for quite some time, and we shared some interesting personal insights about our own educational experiences…both as students and as teachers.

A few hours after we hung up the phone, I came across an article written by Gregg Easterbrook, a writer for the Atlantic Monthly who has been a fellow at the Brookings Institution.  He wrote an article for Brookings in 2004, entitled “Who Needs Harvard?

I recommend it to my readers who want a glimpse of how I think about prestige and the Gotta-Get-In colleges.  I don’t think Harvard and the rest of the top 25 most selective colleges are all bad:  I attended one and taught at another, and I’m proud of my associations with both.  Furthermore, several of the top 25 are truly outstanding—places I might be delighted to see my kids or my nieces and nephews attend.

What I decry is the notion that entry into the top 25 becomes a life-or-death pursuit for many kids—and their parents.  We all must keep things in their proper perspective:  an excellent education can be had a literally hundreds of institutions around the country.

And the quality of a student’s education has much more to do with the initiative, intelligence, and focus of the student than with the quality of the institution she attends.

Mark Montgomery
Educational Consultant



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Families Appeal to Colleges for Extra Aid – WSJ.com

I received a call from a client this morning who gave me the good news that her son was accepted to his top choice university with a $15,000 merit tuition scholarship. He’s still waiting to see if he gets better offers, but his parents are feeling pretty good about things so far.
Others aren’t feeling so good. An article in today’s Wall Street Journal indicates that colleges are seeing more and more families of current students–as well as newly admitted students–file appeals for extra aid.
Here’s a quick snippet (though I recommend the entire article):

The formula for financial aid, set by the federal government, requires colleges to look at a family’s tax return from the previous year. But with rising unemployment and a sinking stock market, many families’ fortunes have changed considerably since they last filed taxes. At the same time, the value of 529 college-savings plans deteriorated by as much as 40% in 2008, according to Pittsburgh-based financial-aid expert Mark Kantrowitz.
Though certain assets, such as retirement plans and home values, are sheltered from the federal-aid formula, losses there can still have a trickle-down effect — if, say, a family was hoping to leverage home equity to pay for college.

No doubt about it:  it’s going to be a tough year for parents and financial aid officers alike.  Oh, and for students, too.
Mark Montgomery
College Consultant